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BACKGROUND
Parieto-occipital epilepsy is uncommon disease that usually occurs with positive symptoms such as illusions, visual hallucinations. The pericital headache, with or without migraine-type characteristics, is common symptoms (amaurosis, hemianopsia) are rare.
METHODS
A 21 year-old woman with
In a difficult case of macroadenoma with progressive change during pregnancy, timely cesarean delivery, avoidance of breastfeeding, and intensive conservative treatment after birth could have satisfactory results, in terms of fetal outcomes, regression of tumor, and resumption of visual activity.
A 78-year-old man was admitted to our hospital with repeated attacks of headache and visual hallucinations, which had begun 10 days before. He also displayed left hemispatial neglect and left homonymous hemianopsia during attacks. Brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) showed an abnormal
METHODS
A 45-year-old woman with a history of seizures, headaches, nausea, vomiting, and decreased visual acuity of 5 years. Visual field detected a bitemporal heteronymous hemianopia. Magnetic resonance imaging revealed basal cistern arachnoiditis and supratentorial hydrocephalus. Cranial computed
This paper reports the occurrence of bilateral hemianopia in a 16 year old male who was having unusual seizures accompanied by severe migrainous headaches and loss of vision while watching a television programme and while playing with the computer. Electrophysiological tests not only confirmed his
BACKGROUND
Arachnoidal cysts are cystic lesions filled with a cerebrospinal-fluid-like content within the leptomeninges. Usually arachnoidal cysts represent a congenital malformation. Clinical signs (increased intracranial pressure and/or neurological defects) may become apparent in children or
BACKGROUND
To demonstrate the efficacy of positron emission tomography (PET) for examining multiple sclerosis (MS) patients with hemianopia.
METHODS
A 20-year-old man visited us with a complaint of left homonymous hemianopia and headache.
METHODS
The patient's visual acuity was 1.2 (n.c.) OD and 0.9
Thunderclap headache is a common emergency department presentation. Although subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) should be the first diagnosis to exclude, reversible cerebral vasoconstriction syndrome (RCVS) is an important alternative cause, which may be commoner than appreciated. Reversible cerebral
A 10-year-old boy had a 4-month history of blurred vision and severe occipital headaches. Visual acuity was diminished bilaterally, but ophthalmoscopy was normal, and the correct diagnosis was delayed until inferior bitemporal defects were found. Cranial CT scans and vertebral angiograms
BACKGROUND
When a child is seen in a clinic with a headache, stroke is certainly not the first on the list of differential diagnoses. In western countries, stroke is typically associated with adults and the elderly. Although rare, haemorrhagic strokes are not exceptional in the paediatric